High-Throughput Crystallization Screening Center

Our Expertise – Your Results

The High-Throughput Crystallization Screening Center performs crystal-growth screening experiments in 1,536-well microassay plates for both soluble and membrane biological macromolecules. You send the sample, we do the rest.

Upcoming Screening Run Dates and Deadlines

December 2018 and January 2019 (updated 12/07/2018)

HOLIDAY Schedule for December:

HWI will be closed Monday Dec 24, 2018 through Wednesday Jan 2, 2019. We will not be accepting packages or setting up samples on those dates. If you have an experiment plate that is currently in progress, it will continue to be imaged, however there may be a slight disruption to the imaging schedule due to the holidays.

From February 2000, the laboratory has been used to set up over 24 million crystallization experiments on >16,000 biological macromolecules. Over 1,000 laboratories worldwide have used and benefited from the service.

In the Literature!

For each crystallization experiment run at the HTCSC, 13,824images are generated. Currently, a user has to visually inspect each of those images to determine if a crystal has formed or not, a major investment of person-time.

The Machine Recognition of Crystallization Outcomes (MARCO) initiative, a multi-institutional collaboration, has assembled a massive database of annotated images of macromolecular crystallization experiments (including those from the HTCSC). The MARCO initiative has developed an innovative algorithm to apply machine learning to these images, taking a major step forward in automatic image analysis of crystallization experiments. The paper (Classification of crystallization outcomes using deep convolutional neural networks) is just out in PLoS ONE!

We are working to implement this algorithm for HTCSC users for automatic classification of images – stay tuned!

At the HTCSC 1,536 different chemical conditions are sampled representing many of the commercially available crystallization screens. Each condition is imaged visually over a period of six weeks. Second Order Non-linear Imaging of Chiral Crystals (SONICC) and UV Two Photon Emitted Fluorescence (UV-TPEF) imaging of crystallization screening also take place to identify biological crystals not picked up visually or those obscured by precipitate.

Color images, and SONICC and UV-TPEF images are integrated with the analysis software provided as part of the service. Lead crystallization conditions can be identified and the complete set of results used to analyze the samples solubility phase diagram.

To make a reservation, please email htslab@hwi.buffalo.edu by the reservation deadline (see above for current dates) to reserve a space in the queue. Include the following information in your reservation email:

User name and contact information

PI/Institution name and contact information

Number of samples you will be sending, as well as approximate date you will be shipping the sample(s)

You will receive an email confirmation from us for your reservation. Once your sample is ready to ship, please fill out the online submission form including payment information.